In this show we discuss the practical applications of masonic symbolism and how the working tools can be used to better yourself, your family, your lodge, and your community. We help good freemasons become better men through honest self development. We talk quite a bit about mental health and men's issues related to emotional and intellectual growth as well.
If the sort of second level or relational reflective understanding of the rough ashlar is the foundation of
charity and compassion,
the
third level of the rough ashlar is the beginning of understanding of humility.
We as we pursue the systemic
understanding of the rough ashlar at a kind of
holistic level, you come to grips very quickly with the notion that
it is the rough ashlar itself which creates the impetus for all change growth and development.
Without the imbalance of the idealized solution, the perfect ashlar and the current state,
nothing would ever progress in the world.
So we begin at a systemic level to really appreciate that
rawness or that unfinishedness in the world.
It starts to become its own form of endearing
place to find and nurture compassion and care.
The systemic rough ashlar looks around the world,
recognizes that it's not perfect,
does not advocate responsibility, so I want to be clear.
But it does kind of
bring to this understanding that everything is perfect even in its own imperfection.
This, it's like a continuous
in Eastern language we would use or in the Eastern religions we might use
like this notion of a continuously perfect mistake
where all of the tensions in the growth and development of an individual
again are emergent from the rough ashlar itself from this state of imperfection.
It is the discomfort or example of sitting on rocks on the ground that gave rise to things
like chairs. So as you start to look around the situations in your life,
you'll begin to get a much more systemic understanding of how these imperfections kind of feed
each other and how to give rise to the systems we have. This will help you become a better
change agent in the world around you as you grow. You should be able to from that systemic
understanding again, looking across the whole landscape of imperfections
with this kinder eye towards what you can change and an understanding that
the things that maybe are the symptoms of the problem aren't necessarily the places where your
effort should be better applied. It should be perhaps in causes and they may be tangential
causes or secondary or tertiary causes. And again, this just helps you with this when you have
this systemic perspective to understand where the opportunities for growth and development are
in your community, in yourself, in the people around you in such a way where
you can dress meaningful root cause as well. So again, none of this is to take away from
good project management, good problem solving skills, all that kind of stuff.
But to just understand and have compassion and sort of an emotional,
create emotional space for the imperfections of the world and how they interact
and how they give rise to the present moment.